Let this be said plainly: the judicialization of political disputes is an act of cowardice and a betrayal of the people who look to political and civic leaders for direction and courage. You cannot hand a problem ignored by 16 million people to seven judges and pretend that you are serious about problem solving. By principle, the judiciary—the last bastion in the defense of civil and political rights—must be the last resort, not the first refuge for political failure. It should enter only when every democratic, political, and civic avenue has been exhausted, not when leaders lack the nerve to act. Beyond the involvement of the judiciary, leaders must be prepared to utter the ancient Capitol war cry, ‘Speak, hands, for me’ and it is this cry that the judiciary must come in to avert. Our people have every right to demand leadership that is responsive and agitated.
After ED is gone we must have a Commission of Enquiry to investigate who was behind this CAB-3 HIEST & those who facilitated it & see if the Commission can recommend criminal prosecutions against the culprits @HizGrace@Chofamba@ali_naka
Mourn Matemadanda and stop talking nonsense.
You are not the Alfa and Omega of the struggle .
Why do too always feel you have ownership of the liberation struggle .
We know for a fact that you were just a cab crawler during the struggle .
You want the nation to believe your propaganda you used against us to carry out a coup in the country! You lied we were criminals around the President! What an oxymoron!! Stop lying and confront the festering dictatorship growing under your filth ampits!
Just mourn Matemadanda and stop making it about yourself.
There are more people who sacrificed more than you but don’t make as much noise as you.
You try to distort us again, we will hit back.
Grow up Hatikure.
As we have always said, ZANU PF does NOT have the numbers they needed. Only 181 ZANU PF MPs voted in favour of #CAB3 falling short of the required 187. The Bill only passed in the National Assembly because of the Tshabangu factor. History will judge harshly those who betrayed the people.
Pwa ~you -pwi-th me , Pwa-you-pwi-th me? Iri timhu rakadhakwa! Join them at your own risk!! Pese pana Temba Mliswa, ziva kuti hakuna chisvinu chiripo, anofunga nemusoro urimunduwe yake !! 🚮🚮🚮
Vice President Constantino Chiwenga,
I write to you as a concerned Zimbabwean whose heart remains firmly rooted in the country, even while living abroad.
No honest discussion about modern Zimbabwe can ignore your place in our nation’s history. You have been one of the most influential figures in the political and security landscape for decades. You played a significant role in the events of November 2017 that changed the course of Zimbabwean politics and brought President Emmerson Mnangagwa to power.
The relationship between you and President Mnangagwa is well known. You have walked a long road together. You have shared victories, struggles and responsibilities in the leadership of this country.
That is precisely why many Zimbabweans are looking to you today.
You know Zimbabwe.
You know its history.
You know the sacrifices that built this nation.
You know the promises that were made to citizens in 2017.
You also know the frustrations that many Zimbabweans now express daily.
Citizens speak of corruption.
Citizens speak of politically connected business interests accumulating enormous influence.
Citizens speak of a growing gap between the struggles of ordinary people and the lifestyles of those benefiting from proximity to power.
Citizens ask whether political authority is increasingly serving the public interest or the interests of a powerful few.
Vice President, you are not a newcomer to government. You have seen Zimbabwe under different leaders, different economic conditions and different political eras.
You know when the country is moving in the right direction.
You know when it is not.
That is why many Zimbabweans are asking difficult questions.
As Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 advances and concerns continue to be raised by people such as Nelson Chamisa, Hon. Blessing Ropafadzo Makumire, Tendai Biti, Professor Lovemore Madhuku and many other Zimbabweans, where do you stand?
Do you believe the concerns being raised by citizens deserve to be heard?
Do you believe the Constitution should remain protected from changes that many Zimbabweans view with suspicion?
Do you believe future generations will look back on this moment with pride?
Most importantly, as one of the most powerful men in Zimbabwe, are you satisfied with the direction the country is taking?
History will remember that you were not merely an observer.
You were one of the central figures of the era.
Will history record that you spoke when it mattered?
Will it record that you defended the interests of ordinary Zimbabweans?
Or will it record that you watched silently while others determined the future of the nation?
These are not questions about loyalty between friends.
They are questions about duty to a nation.
The Zimbabwe of tomorrow will judge every leader not by the offices they held, but by the choices they made when the country needed them most.
Thomas Chizhanje
I am just thinking... maybe there are pple who were shouted at, labelled as sellouts or even abused who genuinely cared about the struggle. Maybe she was even at the forefront of doing those things. Maybe she even gatekeeped & frustrated genuine cadres. Maybe there are pple here who insulted others on her behalf. Then boom, she shows her true colors and leaves you to dry.
There will be no apologies. Even those who ran with her and did her bidding would be disowning her. Life goes on. No sorry. Nothing
Truth is, nobody now will accept that she was their horse. She is now a zai rakaora no one wants to be associated with her... such is this struggle. Anyway, let me sleep....
🔸Nyangwe zvikaitasei ini ndinomira nevana vevhu varikubatwa rough kumhiri uko. Handingambofari nevanhu vanombunyikidza vekwedu. Hazvigoni.
We need new leaders.🇿🇼
@nelsonchamisa@Onanaforandre But you want Zimbabwes to keep supporting you. Isn't that asking them to write paper 7. Imagine if revolutionaries like Joshua Nkomo and Mandela said andinyoreswe paper two after hitting the 1st obstacle. We wasted our votes on this imbecile people.